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Oropharyngeal Shedding of Gammaherpesvirus DNA by Cats, and Natural Infection of Salivary Epithelium

Felis catus gammaherpesvirus-1 (FcaGHV1), a novel candidate oncogenic virus, infects cats worldwide. Whether the oropharynx is a site of virus shedding and persistence, and whether oronasal carcinomas harbor FcaGHV1 nucleic acid were investigated. In a prospective molecular epidemiological study, Fc...

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Autores principales: Rose, Elizabeth C., Tse, Tiffany Y., Oates, Andrew W., Jackson, Ken, Pfeiffer, Susanne, Donahoe, Shannon L., Setyo, Laura, Barrs, Vanessa R., Beatty, Julia A., Pesavento, Patricia A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8950464/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35336972
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v14030566
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author Rose, Elizabeth C.
Tse, Tiffany Y.
Oates, Andrew W.
Jackson, Ken
Pfeiffer, Susanne
Donahoe, Shannon L.
Setyo, Laura
Barrs, Vanessa R.
Beatty, Julia A.
Pesavento, Patricia A.
author_facet Rose, Elizabeth C.
Tse, Tiffany Y.
Oates, Andrew W.
Jackson, Ken
Pfeiffer, Susanne
Donahoe, Shannon L.
Setyo, Laura
Barrs, Vanessa R.
Beatty, Julia A.
Pesavento, Patricia A.
author_sort Rose, Elizabeth C.
collection PubMed
description Felis catus gammaherpesvirus-1 (FcaGHV1), a novel candidate oncogenic virus, infects cats worldwide. Whether the oropharynx is a site of virus shedding and persistence, and whether oronasal carcinomas harbor FcaGHV1 nucleic acid were investigated. In a prospective molecular epidemiological study, FcaGHV1 DNA was detected by cPCR in oropharyngeal swabs from 26/155 (16.8%) of cats. Oropharyngeal shedding was less frequently detected in kittens ≤3 months of age (5/94, 5.3%) than in older animals; >3 months to ≤1 year: 8/26, 30.8%, (p = 0.001, OR 7.91, 95% CI (2.320, 26.979)); >1 year to ≤6 years: 10/20, 50%, (p < 0.001, OR 17.8 95% CI (5.065, 62.557)); >6 years: 3/15, 33% (p = 0.078). Provenance (shelter-owned/privately owned) was not associated with shedding. In situ hybridization (ISH) identified FcaGHV1-infected cells in salivary glandular epithelium but not in other oronasal tissues from two of three cats shedding viral DNA in the oropharynx. In a retrospective dataset of 11 oronasopharyngeal carcinomas, a single tumor tested positive for FcaGHV1 DNA by ISH, a papillary carcinoma, where scattered neoplastic cells showed discrete nuclear hybridization. These data support the oronasopharynx as a site of FcaGHV1 shedding, particularly after maternal antibodies are expected to decline. The salivary epithelium is identified as a potential site of FcaGHV1 persistence. No evidence supporting a role for FcaGHV1 in feline oronasal carcinomas was found in the examined tumours.
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spelling pubmed-89504642022-03-26 Oropharyngeal Shedding of Gammaherpesvirus DNA by Cats, and Natural Infection of Salivary Epithelium Rose, Elizabeth C. Tse, Tiffany Y. Oates, Andrew W. Jackson, Ken Pfeiffer, Susanne Donahoe, Shannon L. Setyo, Laura Barrs, Vanessa R. Beatty, Julia A. Pesavento, Patricia A. Viruses Communication Felis catus gammaherpesvirus-1 (FcaGHV1), a novel candidate oncogenic virus, infects cats worldwide. Whether the oropharynx is a site of virus shedding and persistence, and whether oronasal carcinomas harbor FcaGHV1 nucleic acid were investigated. In a prospective molecular epidemiological study, FcaGHV1 DNA was detected by cPCR in oropharyngeal swabs from 26/155 (16.8%) of cats. Oropharyngeal shedding was less frequently detected in kittens ≤3 months of age (5/94, 5.3%) than in older animals; >3 months to ≤1 year: 8/26, 30.8%, (p = 0.001, OR 7.91, 95% CI (2.320, 26.979)); >1 year to ≤6 years: 10/20, 50%, (p < 0.001, OR 17.8 95% CI (5.065, 62.557)); >6 years: 3/15, 33% (p = 0.078). Provenance (shelter-owned/privately owned) was not associated with shedding. In situ hybridization (ISH) identified FcaGHV1-infected cells in salivary glandular epithelium but not in other oronasal tissues from two of three cats shedding viral DNA in the oropharynx. In a retrospective dataset of 11 oronasopharyngeal carcinomas, a single tumor tested positive for FcaGHV1 DNA by ISH, a papillary carcinoma, where scattered neoplastic cells showed discrete nuclear hybridization. These data support the oronasopharynx as a site of FcaGHV1 shedding, particularly after maternal antibodies are expected to decline. The salivary epithelium is identified as a potential site of FcaGHV1 persistence. No evidence supporting a role for FcaGHV1 in feline oronasal carcinomas was found in the examined tumours. MDPI 2022-03-09 /pmc/articles/PMC8950464/ /pubmed/35336972 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v14030566 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Communication
Rose, Elizabeth C.
Tse, Tiffany Y.
Oates, Andrew W.
Jackson, Ken
Pfeiffer, Susanne
Donahoe, Shannon L.
Setyo, Laura
Barrs, Vanessa R.
Beatty, Julia A.
Pesavento, Patricia A.
Oropharyngeal Shedding of Gammaherpesvirus DNA by Cats, and Natural Infection of Salivary Epithelium
title Oropharyngeal Shedding of Gammaherpesvirus DNA by Cats, and Natural Infection of Salivary Epithelium
title_full Oropharyngeal Shedding of Gammaherpesvirus DNA by Cats, and Natural Infection of Salivary Epithelium
title_fullStr Oropharyngeal Shedding of Gammaherpesvirus DNA by Cats, and Natural Infection of Salivary Epithelium
title_full_unstemmed Oropharyngeal Shedding of Gammaherpesvirus DNA by Cats, and Natural Infection of Salivary Epithelium
title_short Oropharyngeal Shedding of Gammaherpesvirus DNA by Cats, and Natural Infection of Salivary Epithelium
title_sort oropharyngeal shedding of gammaherpesvirus dna by cats, and natural infection of salivary epithelium
topic Communication
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8950464/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35336972
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/v14030566
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